Action day tomorrow Tuesday August 28


Contact details:
HOUSING MINISTER                   PREMIER
Hon Bruce Flegg MP                    Hon Campbell Newman MP
Ph –   3237 1832                           Ph –   3224 4500
Fax – 3012 9017                           Fax – 3221 1809 [email protected]
                                               [email protected]
More information:
https://savetenantservices.net.au/498/day-of-action-call-to-reinstate-on-august-28/

 

Double whammy for tenants as RTA withdraws forms

On November 1, the very same day the tenant advice services will officialy shut their doors due to the funding cut, the Residential Tenancies Authority (RTA) is withdrawing access to tenancy forms from Post Offices across Queensland.

Tenancy forms are used for a number of reasons including – to inform the other party of a breach of the agreement, to dispute the other party’s alleged breach or to claim a bond back – and are currently available from all Post Offices.    Continue reading

Minister’s misinformed statements confound Logan service

Picture: Derrick Tonkin Source: Quest Newspapers

Logan workers are shocked that the Minister for Housing thinks the role of the tenant advice service could be filled by impartial government agency the Residential Tenancies Authority.  Worker Wendy Clark also challenges the Minister’s veiw that cutting their funding will reduce the social housing waiting list.
To read the article click here.500,000 Queensland renting households, including those in the Logan area, will be left without any specialist service after October 31 unless the funding program – Tenant Advice and Advocacy Service – is reinstated.

Minister admits bolstering central government agency at expense of front line

In an interview about funding cuts to the Logan service, Housing Minister Flegg has acknowledged the Residential Tenancies Authority (RTA) will increase in size as a result of his decision to discontinue funding to the Tenant Advice and Advocacy Service program (TAAS).

The RTA is a centralised government agency, unlike the 23 community based, regional and urban advice services which will close as a result of the Minister’s decision.  Such a decision seems contrary to the government’s own stated aim of retaining front line services and bolstering the regions.

The withdrawal of funds to the TAAS program will leave the 500,000 Queensland households who rent without a specialist, tenant focused service.

The decision is extraordinary because much of the work of these services is assisting renters in the private rental market to retain their housing.   This work reduces the incidents of homelessness and subsequently the demand for social housing. The fact that the lion’s share of the program funding is money generated on tenants’ bonds is another aspect of the decision which makes it unreasonable and unfair.

Parliamentary e-petition launched to reinstate funding

A petition has been launched on the Queensland parliament website. Click here to go to it.  The principal petitioner is the member for South Brisbane, Jackie Trad. 

The petiion states:
Queensland residents draws to the attention of the House the appalling decision by the LNP Queensland Government to axe funding to the Tenant Advice and Advocacy Service, Queensland Tenants Union, Caravan and Manufactured Home Residents Association of Queensland Inc. and many other services that provide frontline advocacy for housing tenants.

 These services are a vital resource to many Queenslanders, and their loss will result in many losing their voice when it comes to disputes in the private and social housing market. Further, services funded under TAASQ intervene to prevent homelessness amongst Queensland families and their absence will have a negative affect on homeless rates in Queensland.

Your petitioners therefore request the House to compel the LNP Queensland Government to revoke its decision and reinstate full funding to the above mentioned services.

Funding cuts – a heartfelt view from a management committee

Geoff Smiley, Chair of the Bayside Tenant Advice and Advocacy Service shares his heartfelt views about the withdrawal of funding to their service

The Government’s recent decision to close down Tenant Advice and Advocacy (TAAS) programs across Queensland is cruel in its blatant disregard for the disadvantaged. As chair of one of the management committees (Bayside TAAS) I can only infer from what has happened that the Government is incompetent in identifying where cuts should be made or wants to direct resources away from the disadvantaged. How else would they decide a self-funding; frontline; and community managed service (by volunteers!) be discontinued. Continue reading

Scrimping and saving or taxing tenants?

Minister Flegg has just announced he’s on the lookout for parcel of land in Logan where his department can develop 200 units of housing at a multimillion dollar pricetag.  As a public private partnership and with a view to achieving mixed communities, only a proportion of the units will end up as social housing.

According to the Minister, it’s the ‘scrimping and saving’ that’s made the project possible, including the ‘contraversial axing of a tenants advisory service’, and freed up money for the government to contribute.

Scrimping and saving?? Given that tenant advice funding is derived mainly from tenant bond interest, isn’t it more like an additional tax on tenants, an appropriation of their bond interest at the expense of the only direct benefit they get from it – tenant advice services? 

These monies are simply not the government’s to save or scrimp. Continue reading

Lytton MP mistaken thinking options for tenants covered after closure

The member for Lytton, Neil Symes, is mistaken when he says options for tenants are covered when their local advice service closes at the end of October.  Tenant advice services are the only free specialised advice available for tenants in Queensland and the government has decided to withdraw funding from all 23 of them.  That’s despite the fact they are virtually consumer funded because the lion’s share of money for the program is generated from the interest on tenants’ bonds.

Day of Action – Call to Reinstate on August 28

We need your help on Tuesday August 28th, a day of action calling for the complete reinstatement of the Tenant Advice and Advocacy (TAAS) Program. YOUR CALL!!Save Tenant Services Icon

What you can do:

  1. CALL the Premier and the Housing Minister to seek complete reinstatement of the TAAS program. Keep it short so others can get through!
  2. If you can’t get through, fax or email but keep trying to CALL the Premier and the Housing Minister.
  3. In Brisbane, help us to deliver postcards to the Premier’s electorate office in Ashgrove. Meet at 12.15pm Corner of Stewarts Rd and Waterworks Rd, Ashgrove (Stewart Place – War Memorial).  Please, bring all your family and friends.
  4. If you are in a regional area you can print out postcards and deliver them to your local MP.

If you want you can add some or all of the following pieces of information to your call:

  • TAAS funding is mainly from tenant bond interest and it isn’t fair tenants are denied free access to tenancy advice
  • The RTA doesn’t provide advice or advocacy services to tenants.
  • 80,000 renting households every year will be denied access to tenancy advice which for some of them will result in homelessness.

We want to show the extent of concern for the funding cuts to tenant advice services  on August 28 and need as many people as possible to join in! Come on, make the call!

For the Brisbane event we will be bright and organised.  Please come along if you can.

Contact details:
HOUSING MINISTER                                          PREMIER
Hon Bruce Flegg MP                                           Hon Campbell Newman MP
Ph –   3237 1832                                                 Ph –   3224 4500
Fax – 3012 9017                                                 Fax – 3221 1809
[email protected]   [email protected]

Ask for the Premier and Housing Minister.  If they’re not available, their Chief of Staff or senior/policy advisor.  If no one is available ask the person who answers to leave your message to reinstate the Tenant Advice and Advocacy Program and if you want, ask them to call you back. 

Mackay concerns aired in the press

The Mackay tenant advice service recently aired concerns over the Minister for Housing & Public Works’ ‘false economy’ view.

The Minister wishes to redirect funds from the Tenant Advice and Advocacy program into the building of public housing.  However program funds will build less than one house per area covered by one of the 23 tenant advice services statewide and result in housing 20 households from a wait list of 30,000.

This compares to 80,000 renting households assisted annually by the Tenant Advice and Advocacy program.  Most of these households live in the private rental market and services help to keep people housed and off the social housing waitlist.  See the whole  story here Mackay 4-8

 

Rockhampton TAAS closure in the news

Rockhampton tenant advice worker Debbie Willebrand is concerned about renters  in the area when their only free tenant advice service is defunded at the end of October.  During the month of May alone, 180 households were assisted.

Ms Willebrand points out that most of the households assisted are living in the private rental market, and the tenant advice service helps many of them to remain housed.  The Minister’s stated aim to reallocate tenant advice funding to put roofs over people’s heads is misguided because it belies the fact that these services are doing just that and reducing the demand for public housing.

In the article, the Minister fails to point out that the ‘funding’ from the Residential Tenancies Authority is actually interest generated on tenants’ bonds, which funds the vase majority of tenant advice services.

Read the whole article and the Minister’s comments at http://www.themorningbulletin.com.au/story/2012/08/16/tenant-advice-service-to-close/